Nathan Gluck (June 24, 1918 – September 27, 2008) was an American artist, designer and illustrator who achieved acclaim as Andy Warhol’s principle studio assistant from the early 1950s through the mid-1960s in Warhol’s pre-Pop commercial art studio. Gluck played an instrumental role in helping to shape and create many of Warhol’s most famous illustrations and designs as well as his early transitional Pop pieces. He also quietly devoted his life to exploring the art of collage, creating a number of distinct bodies of work over a period of 70 years, beginning in the late 1930s until his passing in 2008. His earliest collages, created in the 1930s, pay homage to Max Ernst, de Chirico, and Picasso, while those produced from the mid 1990s to 2008 display the finely honed sensibility, originality, and confidence of an artist completely at ease with his skills and knowledge. Gluck’s practice also included window design, drawings, gouache paintings, monoprints, linocuts and inkblots. His works are a reflection of his wide ranging interests and a testament to his voracious appetite for culture—his love and deep knowledge of music, opera and theater, modern and classic literature, travel, food, and world culture, and, above all, his encyclopedic appreciation of art. All of these interests take their rightful place in his work, along with a broad range of stylistic influences, from Cubism and Surrealism to Victoriana and Pop. He was the quintessential cosmopolitan New Yorker, charming and erudite, and part of the first generation of LGBT artists that rose to prominence after World War II and helped transform New York City into the gay metropolis of the late 20th century.
Gluck was born in Perth Amboy, New Jersey in 1918. His mother was Julia Margaretten, a housewife, then secretary, and a member of the Horowitz-Margaretten family, famous for matzohs and other Passover products. His father was Morris Gluck, a prominent businessman at a real estate company owned by his brother-in-law, who lost the business during the Great Depression. In the 1930s, Gluck attended the Art Students League (under Vaclav Vytlacil), the Cooper Union in Manhattan, and the Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY. During World War II he served in Europe and the South Pacific and upon his return began a successful career as an illustrator, designer and art director, beginning with the L. Bamberger department store in New Jersey, which included designing a poster that is now in the Museum of Modern Art Poster Collection. He worked as art director and illustrator for the George N. Kahn Agency, New York, and briefly at the Rockmore Company, an ad agency where Andy Warhol freelanced, beginning that professional relationship. In 1950, he was selected by the ICA Boston to head a design studio at Cheney Silks designing fabric for men’s neckwear. In 1954, he designed the cover for Fortune Magazine for the visionary art director and former Futurist designer and later, noted children's author and illustrator, Leo Leonni. He also designed windows for Gene Moore at Bonwit Teller and Tiffany & Co. and created dozens of original Christmas cards for The Museum of Modern Art, Tiffany & Co., Bergdorf Goodman, Georg Jensen, Cartier, Brentano’s, and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, among others. Prior to retiring at the age of 76 in 1995, he was the archivist at the American Insitute of Grapic Artists (AIGA), whe he worked for over 30 years. During his life, Gluck came to know many artists and art world luminaries whom he admired, including Joan Miro, Marcel Duchamp, Pierre Matisse, George Wittenborn, Ray Johnson, and Philip Johnson, as well as Paul Rand and numerous other greats from the design world. After Warhol died, the Warhol Foundation turned to Gluck, with his first-hand knowledge and expertise, to help authenticate Warhol’s pre-Pop works, which he continued to do until shortly before he passed away.
In the last decade of his life Gluck realized an extraordinary body of work and several solo exhibitions, including Ephemeral Musings (2017) at the Reinhold Brown Gallery, New York, NY; Nathan Gluck: Collages (2001) at The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburg, PA; and Limited Time Offer (2008) at the Athenaeum of Music and Arts Library, La Jolla, CA.
Nathan Gluck’s works are included in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA; Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO; Athenaeum of Music & Arts Library, La Jolla, CA; and numerous private collections worldwide.
Nathan Gluck
Runner Up, January 20, 1997
Collage on paper
7.25 x 7.75 in.
Nathan Gluck
Echinacea, March 14, 1997
Collage on paper
11 x 8 in.
Nathan Gluck
Hearts Aglow, March 20, 1997
Collage on paper
11 x 8 in.
Nathan Gluck
Durer-able Collage, June 21, 1997
Collage on paper
10.8 x 7.8 in.
Nathan Gluck
Untitled, #24, July 9, 1997
Collage on paper
8.25 x 11 in.
Nathan Gluck
Phone Mona, July 5, 1997
Collage on paper
10.5 x 8 in.
Nathan Gluck
The No Sisters: See, Say & Hear, August 11, 1997
Collage on paper
10.8 x 7.8 in.
Nathan Gluck
Manhattan Special, August 15, 1997
Collage on paper
11 x 8.5 in.
Nathan Gluck
Bonjour Braque, October 19, 1997
Collage on paper
10.5 x 8 in.
Nathan Gluck
Stampede, October 25, 1997
Collage on paper
10.8 x 7.8 in.
Nathan Gluck
Kleeful Therapy, October 29, 1997
Collage on paper
8.25 x 11 in.
Nathan Gluck
Galeries Parisiennes, November 2, 1997
Collage on paper
11.25 x 8 in.
By Jody Zellen
Gluck amassed a vast body of work, (making collages for over 70 years) and on view at Luis de Jesus Gallery are a selection borrowed from his estate and created in the 1930s and 1940s. These elegant, small scale works were influenced by Surrealism and share a kinship with other artists making collages at this time including Joseph Cornell, Max Ernst, Hanna Hoch, Man Ray and Kurt Schwitters. The exhibit also includes vitrines with books, documents and ephemera that showcase many of these influences.
By Jessica Gelt and Ashley Lee
Three exhibitions Desire is at the center of Laura Krifka’s figurative oil paintings in “Carousel”; Canadian painter Tristram Lansdowne explores the use of representational space through water colors with “Burrito Planet”; and, marking the centennial of surrealism, “Unlocking the Mind: Early Surrealist Collages” focuses on Nathan Gluck’s World War II-era work.
“Unlocking the Mind: Nathan Gluck’s Early Surrealist Collages” brings together a selection of early career artworks by Nathan Gluck (1918-2008) spanning approximately ten years, from the late 1930s through the late 1940s. The works on view reflect the young artists deep appreciation of modern surrealist masters like Max Ernst, Man Ray, and Domenico de Chirico, and include experiments with narrative prose and original poetry.
The gallery’s fall season starts off with three coinciding exhibitions: Laura Krifka Carousel, Tristram Lansdowne Burrito Planet, and Nathan Gluck Unlocking the Mind: Nathan Gluck’s Early Surrealist Collages. Krifka uses figuration to reflect upon our desires derived from human constructions. Lansdowne takes to watercolors to explore shifting genres. Gluck’s show looks at his career throughout the 1930s and 40s and the influence of the surrealist movement on his collages.
Next door, Luis De Jesus Los Angeles has two fantastic collage-centric solo shows on view until July 28th. Dennis Koch: Beyond the Funny Farm! Crypto-K, Cutouts, Cut-ups, Copies, Mirrors, Membranes, and Temporal Algorithms comprises sculptures and works on paper inspired by dizzying literary theory alongside modified LIFE magazines. The artist has incised into the publications, creating compositions that play off of the cover story and the images from advertisements within. My personal favorite is “Sex Kitten” Ann Margret, hair wild, surrounded by a chorus of televisions.It’s the show in the front room, however, that I found myself thinking about days after seeing. SOMETHING ELSE: The Collages of Nathan Gluck is a survey of the late artist’s small works on paper that spans from the 1930s to the 2000s. Gallerist Luis De Jesus was a close friend of Gluck, who himself worked as a window dresser and assistant to Andy Warhol (among many other adventures). De Jesus lovingly organized this tribute with a personal eye to the artist’s singular wit and personality, sorting through a treasure trove of material in Gluck’s estate.
If Gluck is known at all, it’s as the man who assisted Andy Warhol in his commercial-art business for about a dozen years, ending in 1966. That standard view of Gluck as playing second fiddle to Warhol isn’t quite wrong, but it gives a false impression of how things stood when they first met, around 1951. At that moment, Gluck, a decade Warhol’s senior, was clearly the more sophisticated, mature, and art-educated of the two. He made this photogram, for instance, exactly ten years before Warhol’s tried his hand at the same medium, while still in art school. This and the other early collages at Luis De Jesus show that Gluck was fully clued-in to the latest in European Surrealism at a moment when Warhol was still literally in short pants.
A pair of exhibits at Luis De Jesus Los Angeles demonstrates two distinctly different approaches to the manipulation of paper in the service of cultural commentary. "SOMETHING ELSE: The Collages of Nathan Gluck" celebrates the centennial of the late artist's birth. Mr. Gluck is primairly recognized as Andy Warhol's early commercial art assistant. But the show at Luis De Jesus Los Angeles presents an overdue retrospective of Mr. Gluck's own versatility and skill with collage, but also the wide-ranging possibilities of art form in general. Works on displayinclude photogram, steel engraving, gouache, watercolor, rubberstamps, and marbalized paper and exhibit stylistic influences of the decade in which they were created, such as cubism, surrealism, modernism, pop, word/ text, and postmodernism.
Although many artists and non-artists alike engage with the process of collaging, a successful collage is not that easy to achieve. For the merger of unrelated images and/or texts to resonate beyond the obvious, there is much to take into consideration— point of view, message, cohesion of elements, formal arrangement, etc. Juxtaposing disparate elements from various sources does not necessarily construe art. Collage has a broad history and those who venture into collaging must take into consideration their historical precedents.
Something Else represents the first survey exhibition of collages created by Nathan Gluck, who is recognized as Andy Warhol’s pre-pop commercial art assistant. Gluck helped shape and create many of Warhol’s most famous illustrations, ads and designs. He also assisted Warhol with his early transitional pop pieces. The collages on view span nearly 70 years, from the late 1930s through 2008. Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is located at 2685 S. La Cienega Blvd. For information, visit luisdejesus.com.
I talk with my friend Nathan Gluck about Andy Paperbag...oops, I mean Andy Warhol, blown fuses, John Cage window displays, grocery shopping for items that will change the cultural landscape forever, Lucille Ball's strange choice of protégés, Factory phonies, Greta Garbo's garbage, the origin of muttonchops, Amy Vanderbilt and Jackie O. wannabes, the strange disappearance of Op-Artist Bridget Riley, who wants a "fun" baby, Ben Day dots, and casually loaning items to friends only to have them end up locked away under glass in a museum 20 years later.
“It's hard for me to separate Nathan, the person, from the Nathan, the artist—the two were inextricably bound,” says Luis De Jesus, director of Luis De Jesus Seminal Projects, San Diego, who was Nathan's best friend and was with him when he died.Anyone who knew him personally can see his quirky, yet elegant sense of style, sharp wit, all-encompassing knowledge, refined appreciation of the classics and, above all, his oddball sense of humor reflected throughout his work.
Everthing in thse small compositions reveals a sharp eye for design. Coupled with an easygoing and persuasive artistic vision. "Slibowitz Serenade" typifies his talent, with its wry arrangeent of a liquor label that gives the work its title, floating against a fragment of a musical score punctuated by stars, a fragment of a sculpture, some images of butterflies and a Greco-Roman figure in profile. Gluck's collages are thick with references to Europe. "Opera/Theater" is filled with ticket stubs from operas and concerts amassed in varied continental venues.
Almost everything we've seen of Nathan's was done on a small scale. They are colorful and deft and effortless, as if he knocked them out in the evening after finishing other tasks. He was immensely prolific and generous with his work -- it sometimes seemed that no sooner did he finish a drawing than he put it in the mail and sent it off. There's a drawing he sent to Gina's parents in 1950 of a girl carrying a bunch of balloons.
Nathan Gluck, who was born in 1918, got a job working for Andy Warhol in 1955 and stayed with him, on and off, for much of the 60s. He was his 'studio assistant,' a fact which reveals that, at a fairly early stage, Warhol's enterprises were well developed. Yes, for Andy, job in New York was indeed success. Warhol's operation was commercial, rubbing shoulders with advertising agencies, photographic studios and the design departments of leading department stores (most notably Bonwit Teller and Tiffany). From the 'real' world of art, its magnificoes and dealers, he was somewhat distanced and in awe.
In the 1950s, when Andy Warhol was a sought-after commercial artist, Nathan Gluck was his assistant, making drawings and designing layouts that are cherished today as signs of Warhol's hybrid genius. After Warhol turned to fine art, Mr. Gluck pursued his own successful career as an illustrator and graphic designer, and in retirement, he is concentrating his energies on small, beautifully composed collages, 85 of which form this impressive show. Combining a range of printed detritus -- matchbook covers, wine labels, ticket stubs -- from around the world and the past several decades, these works play on words, forms, colors (often Warholesque fluourescents) and, above all, on styles.